Swimming with the sharks can actually be the best experience of your life. By Juliet Vigurs

Hi, my name is Juliet, Iā€™m 50, I live in Yorkshire with my partner and our 4 children & 2 dogs. I was diagnosed with breast Cancer in September 2016. I had heard people who had been through a similar experience, say that the room went blurry and that the words seemed unreal. But that wasnā€™t of any importance, it would never happen to meā€¦

All I can remember is my shoes, I stared at them as the consultant spoke to me, to be honest, I canā€™t really remember what he said, Breast cancer, mastectomy and chemotherapy were the words that resonated. My mum sat in a chair in the corner of the room, she picked up her phone halfway through to text my dad. She said later that she was as much in shock as I was. The nurse said sheā€™d never had someone text halfway through a diagnosis. Yet, still, those cream loafers stared back at me, the tassels on them screaming in silence as I sat, dumbfounded. I have never worn them since. Iā€™d had issues with my boobs before, breastfeeding had left me with calcifications which form when the milk in the ducts form calcium stones, Iā€™d was told not to worry about having lumpy bits, so I didnā€™t. It was only after a routine mammogram and a look from the radiographer, followed by a ā€˜nothing to worry aboutā€™ biopsy that I returned to the clinic, expecting to be told that I had another stone in my right breast.

The weekend after the diagnosis was the worst, I had been told on a Friday. I googled myself into a state and took to my bed. Hiding from the world as my brain screamed in silence. Monday came so slowly that weekend, I had to tell the children at some stage and yet all I wanted to do was run away and hide. From then on, I canā€™t really remember details, possibly because of the way my head dealt with it, the endless appointments, procedures, chemotherapy, side-effects, hair loss, wigs, breast removal and reconstruction, all just followed on one after another. My new boobs actually look amazing and I am so grateful that I found such a caring and understanding surgeon. My wigs were called Priscilla and Daphne, they helped me be me. Even with the loss of all my other hair, eyebrows, eyelashes and other bits, I managed to maintain a makeup and skincare routine.

Chemo isnā€™t kind to the skin and moisturising was a nightmare, it just slid off my skin. Massages and spas were recommended by my oncology team. Most spas are still a bit hesitant to treat a cancer patient, however, I did find some places that were happy to treat me, these helped my well-being more than anything. Being able to relax for even half an hour was wonderful. One thing I managed not to lose throughout this was my sense of humour. I mean I had wanted a breast reduction for years; I was rocking a 38G, my boobs entered the room before me. Not the best way to go about it though eh?

Now I look like a spaniel listening to a dog-whistle when I look at my nipples. One is perfectly sat upon my plastic booby, the other is proceeding south as a 50-year-old boob does. Though my surgeon did a nipple graft, which involved cutting my remain nipple in half and stitching it onto my fake boob, the tattooing around it. It looks fabulous, just a bit wonky. I donā€™t have to wear a bra anymore; I can wear strappy tops. My hair has grown back and I have had hair extensions because I can and I want to look like a blonde goddess at 50. During my blogs I openly talk about being a warrior, being a survivor, letting yourself fall apart, how to be a friend to someone with cancer and also what happens when all the treatment stops and you are just left in the middle of the ocean without a life raft. Swimming with the sharks can actually be the best experience of your life, cancer makes you change.

Juliet

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